Pilot Thinks Proposed FAA Drone Rules Too Lenient

Pilot Thinks Proposed FAA Drone Rules Too Lenient

lyinggit

BY 

The proposed FAA regulations on commercial drones is too lenient for one local drone pilot.

Joseph Matthew parflayed a fascination with radio controlled cars and airplanes into an aerial photography business three yeas ago to serve architectural, real estate and film-industry clients.

The proposed rules include restricting speeds to 100 miles per hour, an altitude no higher than 500 feet, banning them from within 5 miles of an airport, registering the machines and requiring pilots to have a background check by the TSA. Matthew thinks the rules are too lenient.


Matthew says perhaps manufacturers that are making a killing selling the easy to fly camera mounted drones should take responsibility for licensing or training drone pilots. He says his eight-bladed, 30-pound, top-of-the-line drone can cause a lot of damage if it falls from the sky. But so can his smaller 5-pound models.

“Just think, if one of these Phantoms falls and blinds a kid walking home from school, they can be very dangerous,” said Matthew.

He talked of an incident with a pilot a few days ago at an area where drone pilots fly.

“He’d been flying for a few months and was a pretty confident pilot. Within 30 seconds he hit a cable and his drone crashed to the dock,” said Mathew.

The latest drones equipped with multiple gyros and GPS cost from several hundred to $1,500 can be easy to fly. But they also have the performance to get away from a pilot who has a lapse in concentration and crash.

Matthew also fears there could be a privacy issue with irresponsible pilots who will give legitimate drone operators a bad name. The state legislature is considering several bills to deal with the proliferation of drones and privacy concerns.

http://fox40.com/2015/02/16/pilot-thinks-proposed-faa-drone-rules-too-lenient/

Press